These Are The Clues To Look For On Election Night

Following the final scramble for the White House is a bit like
watching a tennis match – with heads constantly turning as
President Obama and Republican Mitt
Romney jet across the country.

With Obama holding a narrow lead in the polls, the race is on a
razor thin margin. Their schedules seem to
defy the laws of time and space.

On Monday, Obama led rallies in Wisconsin, Ohio and Iowa before
heading to Chicago where he will await the returns.

Romney appeared Monday in Florida, Virginia, Ohio, and wrapped up
the evening at a rally in Manchester, N.H. The former
Massachusetts governor will return to Ohio and Pennsylvania
today.

If you want to be the smartest guest at the election party
tomorrow night, and offer the best answer to who will actually
win, The Fiscal Times has put together a list of the
nine major factors to watch on Election Day.

270 –
The magic number of electoral votes needed to win the presidency
can be reached a variety of ways. What makes Obama the
favorite is that he’s on track to secure 237 electoral votes.
Romney is set to lock down 206 votes – with about 95 electoral
votes left for the taking.

Even if Romney wins Colorado, Florida, Virginia and Wisconsin, he
would still need three more electoral votes to break 270. This
means also checking for potential upsets where Obama appears to
be ahead, such as Pennsylvania (20 votes) and Michigan (16
votes), that would suddenly improve Romney’s odds.

Weather
Forecast – It’s supposed to be sunny in Cleveland
on Tuesday with a high of 46 degrees. There’s a 60 percent chance
of scattered thunderstorms in Tampa. Romney’s fortunes could be
riding on cloudy skies. On Wednesday, a Nor’easter is set to
rampage through the mid-Atlantic, a region already dealing with
the fallout of Hurricane Sandy. Bad weather causes fewer
people to vote.

A 2007 study that appeared in the The Journal of
Politics found voter turnout decreases by about 1 percent
for each inch of rainfall – and poor weather tends to benefit
Republicans. The study, entitled “The Republicans Should Pray for
Rain: Weather, Turnout, and Voting in U.S. Presidential
Elections,” examined 14 presidential elections in 3,000 counties.

For example, Tunica County, Miss. received 4.35 inches of rain on
election day in 1972 and turnout fell by 3.8 percent. Bad
weather in 1960 would have denied John F. Kennedy the White
House, while dry skies in 2000 would have made Al Gore
president, the paper concludes.

Early
Voting – About 40.6 million people, more than
30 percent of the electorate, voted early in 2008, compared to
slightly more than 30.6 million people so far this year,
according to tracking by George Mason University.

Advanced voting will influence the outcome in several key states.
Florida had roughly 53 percent of its voters cast their ballots
early, with Democrats representing an increasing share of early
voters relative to 2008. Almost a third of Ohio ballots will be
from early voters.

The early voting – the results of which are not yet public –
reveal the importance of independents. Democrats hold a sizable
edge in Nevada and North Carolina, two states where early voters
are the majority of the electorate. That makes independents,
somewhere between 19 percent and 20 percent of voters in those
states, critical for a Romney win.

If you’re looking for early returns tonight, here are four states
to consider:

Virginia – Polls close at 7
p.m. EST in this critical state, where control of the Senate is
also potentially in the balance. Former Democratic governor
Tim
Kaine holds a slight lead over former Republican governor and
senator George
Allen for a seat being vacated by retiring Democrat Jim
Webb. Republicans acknowledge that unless Romney manages to
carry the state, Allen is unlikely to win.

Indiana
– The Hoosier state, normally a GOP lock, is another Senate
bellwether with polls closing at 7 pm. After upsetting veteran
Republican Sen. Richard
Lugar in the GOP primary, arch conservative State Treasurer
Richard
Mourdock has alienated moderates and suggested that
pregnancies from rape are part of God’s plan. If Democratic Rep.
Joe Donnelly wins the seat, that could keep the Democratic
majority in the Senate.

Ohio –
Returns from the Buckeye state will start being released after
7:30 p.m. EST. This has the potential to be the whole
ball of wax, since an Obama win here practically puts a
Romney victory out of reach. Sen. Sherrod
Brown (D) is favored to fend off a challenge from Republican
State Treasurer Josh Mandel.

North
Carolina–The polls close at
7:30 p.m. Obama scored a surprising win in the Tar Heel
State four years ago by a razor thin 0.4 percent of the vote, but
times have changed. Romney has led in most of the surveys of
likely voters. Yet early voting gives a decisive advantage to
Obama.

0.5
percent – This is the critical margin of victory
in Colorado and Florida. Anything below 0.5 percent triggers an
automatic recount. If Obama and Romney are within about
40,000 votes of each other in Florida, then the state’s 29
electoral votes are up for grabs. For statewide elections in
Ohio, automatic recounts are triggered by margins of less than
0.25 percent – roughly 13,000 votes.

The last recount twelve years ago in Florida erupted into a
bureaucratic and legal battle that was eventually settled by the
Supreme Court in the Republicans’ favor. With the government set
to topple off the fiscal cliff next year, an
extended period of limbo about the occupant of the White House
could prove devastating.

“Recall that in 2000 it took until December 12th to decide the
election, something we can ill afford today,” said Ethan Harris,
North American economist for Bank
of AmericaMerrill
Lynch.

Exit
Polls – These get a lot of attention on election
night, but the networks have a checkered past in calling big
races – think 2000 when Florida was prematurely called for
Democrat Al Gore and then for George W. Bush and the projections
were withdrawn.

University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato, a
veteran of election nights, has this added advice: “Ignore the
leaked exit polls. I have found them frequently to be wrong and
heavily tilted to one side. I’ve been doing this for decades –
believe me when I tell you the first waves are often misleading.”

The operating philosophy with exit polls this year is that it’s
better to be accurate than to be first in announcing a winner.
And just as in 2008, TV channels and newspapers will not project
a winner of the presidential election before the polls close on
the West Coast.